The Journal of Insights Through Reflections On Nature

Archive for April 16th, 2018

Today was the 29th day of the Sacred month of Rajab in the Islamic Calendar. It is the the 7th month in the Islamic year and proceeds the Holy month of Ramadan by two months. Sighting its new crescent is first in line to accurately determining the start of Ramadan as it sets up the correct sighting day for the 8th month known as Shabaan. Today was that crucial day for sighting Shabaan.

It was a touch and go day if the new moon of Shabaan would be seen at all. As the afternoon unfolded for us here on the West Coast, I received reports from further east that the sky was clouded over by other moon sighters. It was looking grim for us as well. We had on and off rain all day and as I pulled up to our new sighting location in the Santa Cruz mountains, it was not looking good.

First Sight – Not Looking Good!

My close friend and fellow moonsighter was about 50 or so miles north standing on Mount Tamalpais had much better conditions and I was hoping that at least he would see it. Here is the sky he had.

Looking Good!

My assistants standing with me on that wind blown ridge started to lose hope as it started to rain on us. I took off my jacket and covered the camera on the tripod and said, “we wait it out”. There is always hope. The rain slowly subsided. The clouds started to break and I became even more hopeful, while the others not so much. Slowly the breaks in the clouds became bigger and then smaller. Gaps would open and our eyes played tricks on us as we thought we saw it and then not.

The all of a sudden at 8:02 pm PDT my phone rang, it was a text from my friend up north. He saw the moon with 2 other adult males and one adult female for a total of 4 witnesses. I was both elated and saddened at the same time as it was starting to look grim for us again. But we pushed on. The moon was still in the sky and if we needed to we would stay there until moon set. We kept searching, the clouds kept passing in and out leaving gaps where we needed to look. Then my oldest assistant cried out, “I think I see it Allahu Akbar,…No…maybe…I don’t know”. Then one of my other assistants said the same. I was still “in the clouds”.

Then both of those assistants cry out “There it is, Allahu Akbar! I see it”. The other two “Where, where?” There is confusion as I and the other two tried to find it. Descriptions were not clear as to where to look. Then all of a sudden, right in a gap between the clouds, I see it. “Allahu Akbar!!!!”. I quickly point the camera at it, and I snap off one exposure. Then I try to point it out to my other two assistants. While I try to get some more exposures. The moon sank quickly behind the clouds below it, allowing only one good exposure of the new moon of Shabaan. We sighted it at 8:07 pm PDT with about an azimuth of 280 degrees and an altitude of just 3 fingers above the horizon.

Shabaan 1, 1439

Not as artistically placed as usually try to do, but this time I caught that moon just in the nick of time. In the end we were elated. We went out and fulfilled our Sunnah of seeing the new crescent moon. We are taking back this sunnah. We will not let it be lost. One month from now, that is in 29 days, count them and go out and look for the the moon of Ramadan and take back the sunnah for yourself. You will not be disappointed.